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| We have chosen our second Candidate Colleen Hennessy We are accepting applications for additional candidates Candidates Form | ||
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Colleen Hennessy Candidate Dr. De Smet 2008
I returned to the USA in August, 2007, after a 27 month Peace Corps assignment in the rain forest on a mountaintop in Honduras. My little village had rough, rocky roads, and with an aching hip, it was sometimes quite a struggle to hike the half mile uphill to my house. On three different occasions, I fell and cut my knees. My hip was getting worse but I said nothing to the Peace Corps Medical Unit. You were sent home permanently and your service as a volunteer was abruptly ended if you had a problem like a hip that required surgery. I loved my time in Honduras, the people, the orchids, butterflies and the opportunity to spend 2+ years away from the fast pace of the USA. So I put up with the pain. I would admit it at the end of my service. There were several medical exams at the close of my service, before returning to the USA. I finally had an x-ray of my hip and was told by two doctors (one in Honduras and one in Colorado), that I had osteoarthritis and needed hip surgery. Here I was, back in my native city of Denver, limping around with no health insurance. Peace Corps is finished with the volunteer as soon as they return to the states, as far as any medical assistance. Surgery was out of the question for me. I took a lot of calcium and glucosamine chondroitin, hoping this would somehow create a miracle in my hip. I exercised as much as I could, as the weather turned to snow. Three days after returning to the USA from Honduras, I attended my 30th high school reunion. There was not much of a turnout from our class of over 600 graduates, but I was delighted to reconnect with an old friend whom I have known since the first grade. She was the first to tell me about hip resurfacing and I had no idea that there existed an alternative to a total hip replacement. Struggling to walk through the parking lot that night of the reunion, I felt 98, not 48 years old. I spent the cold Colorado winter in pain, reading as much as I could about resurfacing. I talked on the phone with a doctor in Boulder who does hip resurfacing and asked what kind of price an uninsured person would be looking at. I was quoted $3,000 for the surgery and $59,000+ for three days in the hospital! This did not include the fees from the anesthesiologist! Impossible for me. In addition, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center was unwilling to work with me, and there were no clinical trials anywhere. I started reading messages on the surface hippy website and learned about DAST, thanks to Vicky Marlow. Being selected as Dr. De Smet's candidate for 2008 was a prayer answered. I decided to post all of my paintings and photographs on a website and have an art fundraiser. I sold 104 pieces and raised $6,765.00 toward the trip to Belgium. The middle of April was my scheduled time for surgery. Dr. De Smet and the staff at Villa Centro Passi are every bit as fantastic as everyone says. This was my first time in the hospital and first surgery, and it was rough. The anesthesia had me violently vomiting for what felt like 20 hours. Nobody, including myself, knew that I would have that kind of reaction. I hope there will never be a "next time", but now I know for the future. There are medicines to calm the stomach, they say. All of my fellow patients who were rehabbing at the Villa seemed to be doing better than I was, yet I was the youngest. The physical therapist reminded me that we all heal at different rates. Getting in the pool every afternoon was fantastic, truly the best way to rehab. Dr. De Smet told me that my femur was in really bad shape and that I should not have waited so long. The surgery was done just in time. The staff at the Villa seem to know just when you are ready to get on a plane. My 12 hour flight was rough, but I had the aisle seat and stood up a lot, doing leg exercises in the galley when the stewardesses did not need the space. I met people from Holland, France, and the USA. Several from the USA had health insurance, but came to Belgium because of Dr. De Smet's reputation and because their USA doctors did not offer a resurfacing option, only a total hip replacement. It has been only three weeks since my April 15 surgery. I am still on crutches of course, and following all of the instructions given to me in Belgium. I cannot afford a physical therapist here in Denver, so I will have to be my own. I will start visiting a therapy pool next week. Nothing like the water! I still have some swelling and pain around the incision, but made my first short walk around the park today and no pain anymore! It brings tears of joy to now be on the other side of this. Do not wait too long like I did! Just get the job done! Thank you Dr. De Smet, Vicky Marlow and DAST International. I will be forever grateful. Colleen Hennessy Denver, CO
The letter "x" they draw on your leg before
Physical therapy in your room the first day out of
Resting in the comfortable "Villa" with an ice
Dr. De Smet
Villa Cento Passi in Gent
The "throne" in the Villa lobby
Dining with a fellow "hippy" from France DAST International is looking for candidates. If you would like to be considered as a candidate please complete the Candidates Application Form.
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DAST International selects another candidate
DAST International has selected it's second candidate to receive financial assistance with hip resurfacing surgery. Colleen Hennessy is 49 years old and lives in Denver, Colorado, she recently returned from Honduras as a Peace Corps volunteer and has no health insurance. She will be having he surgery with Dr. De Smet in Belgium on April 15, 2008. Dr. De Smet and his staff from the ANCA-Clinic of the AMC-Gent are donating their services to perform one hip resurfacing surgery per year. Colleen will stay free at Hugo's Rehab Center "Villo Cento Passi" http://www.villacentopassi.com/fla/index.html while in Belgium. Smith & Nephew is also donating one (BHR) Birmingham Hip Resurfacing device per year. The entire cost to the patient which will cover hospital stay etc. is only 3000 euros plus cost of airfare. I want to thank Dr. DeSmet and Hugo for the incredible generosity in offering this to Colleen as our selected patient this year. A little about Colleen in her own words below. "My name is Colleen Hennessy. I am 49 years old and a recently returned Peace Corps volunteer. I was in Honduras for the last 27 months, living in a remote village in the cloud forest on a mountaintop. In a place that rains nine months a year, the local children were ecstatic to work with me in establishing the town's first library and computer center. My hip has bothered me for some time now, but I have endured the pain because I have no health insurance and kept hoping that it would get better. I cannot walk any distance without pain in my lower back and hip. I have very limited movement and little flexibility. Recently, I connected with the yahoo surface hippy group and what a wonderful resource! It was there that I found out about DAST International. How grateful I am that organizations such as this exist! I also appreciate all the stories and other information that people have posted on the "hippy" site and look forward to sharing my own!" Why "DAST"? According to a dictionary of Urdu, classical Hindi and English, "dast" is the, "ability, power, means; aid, assistance; facility; dexterity, skill; acquisition, attainment."
It means: "To come to hand, to arrive; to be reached; to be obtained; to have in one's power, to be able." It also means, "'Having healing in his hand,' an epithet of a physician who is successful in restoring his patients to health:--dast-talab, s.m. Begging; want:--dast-e-gaib, s.m. lit. 'The hidden hand'; a charm or incantation by means of which a hidden hand supplies one's healing. Dast is ONE miraculous word that embodies hip resurfacing surgery, the return of the patient to his/her abilities through the skill of the surgeon, one's need for help, and the "healing hand" of the surgeon who performs the procedure! For us, it means "help ." To donate please click on the Pay Pal button below. Donations are made thru Pay Pal's secure service. No Pay Pal account is required and credit cards are accepted. Now Accepting Donations Checks Accepted Via Mail at: DAST International, Inc.
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Copyright 2007 DAST International a Non-profit Organization |